Yes, your balance would not be affected on the moon.
A spring balance would work on the moon but would first have to be re-calibrated for the moons lower gravity.
It would work properly, although it would be very inaccurate. No matter how much gravity there is, an object's mass stays the same. A balance takes the weight of an object on the surface of Earth and, with the counterweights, balances it out with an approximate mass. If you wanted a balance to work on the moon, you would need to relabel the balance.
No, an inertia balance relies on the force of gravity to measure the mass of an object. Without gravity, the balance would not function properly as it would not have a force acting on the mass being measured.
Because there is very little gravity there and so everything is lighter, meaning the pendulum would not swing the way it does on Earth.
yes
Work in Process is considered an asset because it is inventory. Assets have a debit normal balance. adding materials to work in process is a debit to work in process.
the balance of water in her body would be wrong.
A hot air balloon would not work on the moon.
Yes, but it wouldn't be of any use. The balance operates by comparing the force of gravity on various masses. In outer space, since there is no large mass nearby, the force of gravity on any reasonable test-mass is essentially zero. The balance would accurately report the weight of every mass placed on it as 'zero', or close to it.
Yes
Yes, i pretty shure it would
It would work it if is calibrated to account for the lower gravity on the Moon.